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Retreat pattern of the C ordilleran I ce S heet in central B ritish C olumbia at the end of the last glaciation reconstructed from glacial meltwater landforms
Author(s) -
Margold Martin,
Jansson Krister N.,
Kleman Johan,
Stroeven Arjen P.,
Clague John J.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
boreas
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.95
H-Index - 74
eISSN - 1502-3885
pISSN - 0300-9483
DOI - 10.1111/bor.12007
Subject(s) - deglaciation , geology , meltwater , landform , ice sheet , glacial period , ice stream , glacier , geomorphology , physical geography , cryosphere , oceanography , sea ice , geography
The C ordilleran I ce S heet ( CIS ) covered much of the mountainous northwestern part of N orth A merica at least several times during the P leistocene. The pattern and timing of its growth and decay are, however, poorly understood. Here, we present a reconstruction of the pattern of ice‐sheet retreat in central B ritish C olumbia at the end of the last glaciation based on a palaeoglaciological interpretation of ice‐marginal meltwater channels, eskers and deltas mapped from satellite imagery and digital elevation models. A consistent spatial pattern of high‐elevation (1600–2400 m a.s.l.), ice‐marginal meltwater channels is evident across central B ritish C olumbia. These landforms indicate the presence of ice domes over the S keena M ountains and the central C oast M ountains early during deglaciation. Ice sourced in the C oast M ountains remained dominant over the southern and east‐central parts of the I nterior P lateau during deglaciation. Our reconstruction shows a successive westward retreat of the ice margin from the western foot of the R ocky M ountains, accompanied by the formation and rapid evolution of a glacial lake in the upper F raser R iver basin. The final stage of deglaciation is characterized by the frontal retreat of ice lobes through the valleys of the S keena and O mineca M ountains and by the formation of large esker systems in the most prominent topographic lows of the I nterior P lateau. We conclude that the CIS underwent a large‐scale reconfiguration early during deglaciation and was subsequently diminished by thinning and complex frontal retreat towards the C oast M ountains.

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